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UPDATED: September-5-2008  
Hong Kong Disabled People in Beijing
by YANG XIAOPING 

There is a Chinese saying which claims that one cannot be a man until one has reached the Great Wall. Early last month 21 disabled people from Hong Kong made the climb.

Hosted by the Beijing Travel Service Bureau, the group consisted of two blind men, two deaf men and 17 maimed or paralysed people. Nine of them are confined to wheelchairs. The hosts sent 20 people along to help them.

Most of these tourists have never been to Beijing before and were charmed by the magnificent historical and cultural sites in the city. Liu Chang who is blind was permitted to touch the white marble sculptures on the Monument to the People's Heroes and was relunctant to leave. The group also visited a school for deaf-mutes, some welfare undertakings for disabled people, and a club for disabled people in Beijing. They had get-togethers with disabled people in the city.

Deng Pufang, president of the board of directors of the China Disabled Welfare Fund, says that disabled people should travel. It can help widen their horizons, enrich their lives and gain the same social standing as able-bodied people. At present the travel facilities for disabled people in China are inadequate and need to be improved.

(Beijing Review p.29 No. 44, 1987)


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